Críticas:
"Recommended. General readers and lower-division undergraduates and above."-Choice ?Recommended. General readers and lower-division undergraduates and above.?-Choice "Tocqueville warned that the Supreme Court is not the least but potentially the most dangerous branch of our national government. Powers and Rothman's highly readable and informative book amply corroborates this judgement in area after area. There is little that is more important, in my opinion, than that the American people come to understand this."-Professor Lino Graglia University of Texas "A new, wide-ranging, and provocative critique of judicial activism."-Roger Clegg General Counsel Center for Equal Opportunity "A scholarly, modulated, but ultimately devastating examination of the ways in which the Supreme Court, and American courts generally, have successfully taken control of public policy making in critical areas of our national life."-Richard R. Morgan Bowdoin College "This book is a comprehensive and penetrating analysis of judicial intervention into policy arenas normally reserved for legislatures. Its scope is unusually broad, covering judicial activism in school desegregation, affirmative action, voting, mental health, and prison reform. While sometimes critical of judicial excesses, the discussion is balanced by acknowledging the necessity of court action after legislative default, especially in the civil rights area. The writing avoids legal terms and technicalities, producing a very approachable and useful text for all students of social policy and constitutional law."-David J. Armor Professor of Public Policy School of Public Policy George Mason University
Reseña del editor:
Is the American judiciary still the least dangerous branch, as Alexander Hamilton and legal scholar Alexander Bickel characterized it? Unlike legislatures or administrative agencies, courts do not make policy so much as direct and redirect policy as it is implemented. The judicial contribution to policymaking involves the infusion of constitutional rights into the realm of public policy, and as the government has grown, the courts have become more powerful from doing more and more of this. Powers and Rothman explore the impact of the federal courts, providing a brief account of the development of constitutional law and an overview of the judiciary's impact in six controversial areas of public policy. *Busing *Affirmative action *Prison reform *Mental health reform *Procedural reforms in law enforcement *Electoral redistricting In each of these areas, the authors review significant cases that bear on the particular policy, exploring the social science evidence to assess the impact of the courts on policies-and the consequences of that intervention. Powers and Rothman conclude that judicial intervention in public policy has often brought about undesirable consequences, sometimes even for the intended beneficiaries of government intervention.
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